HMS_Ville_de_Paris

HMS <i>Ville de Paris</i>

HMS Ville de Paris

Royal Navy ship of the line of the Napoleonic era


HMS Ville de Paris was a 110-gun first rate ship of the line of the Royal Navy, launched on 17 July 1795 at Chatham Dockyard. She was designed by Sir John Henslow, and was the only ship built to her draught.[2] She was named after the French ship of the line Ville de Paris, flagship of François Joseph Paul de Grasse during the American Revolutionary War. That ship had been captured by the Royal Navy at the Battle of the Saintes in April 1782, but in September of that year on the voyage to England as a prize, she sank in a hurricane.

Quick Facts History, Great Britain ...
Ville de Paris during construction, at the Royal Dockyard Chatham, 1789

She served as the flagship of John Jervis, 1st Earl of St Vincent, with the Channel Fleet.

On 17 August 1803, the boats of Ville de Paris captured the French privateer Messager from among the rocks off Ushant. Lloyd's Patriotic Fund awarded Lieutenant Watts, of Ville de Paris, with an honour sword worth £50 for his role in the cutting out expedition. Messager was pierced for eight guns but had six mounted, and had her owner and 40 men aboard when Watts arrived with his pinnace and 18 men. The British captured her before the other boats from Ville de Paris could arrive. The French put up a minimal resistance and only suffered a few men lightly wounded; the British suffered no casualties. The action occurred in sight of the hired armed cutter Nimrod. In January 1805 head and prize money from the proceeds of the French privateer Messager was due to be paid.[3]

On 18 January 1808, following the Battle of Corunna, Ville de Paris (Captain John Surman Carden) evacuated twenty-three officers of the 50th, three of the 43rd, four of the 26th, three of the 18th, one of the 76th, two of the 52nd, two of the 36th, four Royal Engineers, and two Royal Artillery - a total of 44 officers,[4] including General Sir David Baird, his ADC Captain Hon Alexander Gordon,[5] Sir John Colborne and Lieutenant Henry Percy.[6] Ville de Paris also embarked several thousand soldiers.[7]

Later, Admiral Collingwood died aboard her of cancer while on service in the Mediterranean, off Port Mahón, on 7 March 1810.

On 22 July 1814, at the conclusion of the Peninsula War, Ville de Paris arrived off Portsmouth carrying the 43rd Light Infantry Battalion along with the 2nd Rifles.[8][9]

Ville de Paris was placed on harbour service in 1824, and she was broken up in 1845.[2]


Notes

  1. Lavery, Ships of the Line, vol. 1, p. 182.
  2. "No. 15768". The London Gazette. 1 January 1805. p. 23.
  3. TNA, see below
  4. Lieutenant-Colonel Sir Alexander Gordon KCB (1786–1815), was a British Army officer who was killed at the Battle of Waterloo.
  5. William Mahon, see below
  6. Admiral John Surman Carden, see below
  7. Costello, see below
  8. Urban, see below

References

  • British National Archives. Passengers on warships.(TNA ADM 12, section 72.2)
  • Carden, John Surman (1912). A curtail'd memoir ... Ed Atkinson, C. T., Oxford.
  • Colledge, J. J.; Warlow, Ben (2006) [1969]. Ships of the Royal Navy: The Complete Record of all Fighting Ships of the Royal Navy (Rev. ed.). London: Chatham Publishing. ISBN 978-1-86176-281-8.
  • Costello, Edward (1841). Memoirs of Edward Costello KSF. Henry Colburn, London. Also published as The True Story of a Peninsular Rifleman, Singlepicker Press, 1997.
  • Kennedy, Don H. (1974). Ship Names: Origins and Usages during 45 Centuries. Charlottesville: University Press of Virginia. ISBN 0-8139-0531-1.
  • Lavery, Brian (2003) The Ship of the Line - Volume 1: The Development of the Battlefleet 1650–1850. Conway Maritime Press. ISBN 0-85177-252-8.
  • Mahon, William (2017). Waterloo Messenger: The Life of Henry Percy, Peninsular Soldier and French Prisoner of War. Pen and Sword.
  • Urban, Mark (2003). Rifles: Six Years with Wellington's Legendary Sharpshooters. Faber & Faber. ISBN 0571216811

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